WGS -Wideband Global SATCOM (photo : Avionics Intelligence)
Singapore
– The U.S.’s increasing
presence in Australia
and the Asia-Pacific region has implications for military satellite
communications, says the Australian Defense Department ’s satellite capability
project officer, Sqdn. Leader Daniel Howarth.
“It will mean more challenges,” as the U.S. will
increasingly be using bandwidth from its Wideband Global Satcom (WGS)
satellites covering the region , he notes. The U.S.,
however, has given assurances that Australia will have guaranteed
access to the WGS network, Howarth says. But he also explains that the U.S. controls the WGS network, so Australia faces a challenge of ensuring that the
U.S. sticks to its
commitment and gives Australia
the access it needs.
Howarth says WGS is useful to Australia because it provides
global coverage as well as the ability to focus on the country’s territory and
the Pacific and Indian oceans.
Australia’s
military currently uses commercial satellite Optus C1 for wideband coverage.
“Having only a single satellite has created operational issues” for the
military, says Howarth. Australia’s
military forces in Afghanistan,
for example, were unable to use C1 because the satellite provides coverage only
of Australia,
he says. This means Australian forces had to use commercial satellite communication
providers, he adds.
Howarth was speaking at the MilSatCom conference in Singapore on
May 9. One of the conference delegates asked Howarth whether the Australian
military will be using the new satellites that the country is launching.
Two satellites are expected to provide the country ’s
population with a national broadband network (NBN). Howarth says the military
will have no payload on these satellites.
It is “a missed opportunity,” says Howarth, adding that “to
put a military payload on that satellite” would have given Australia its
own military satellite capability, rather than relying on spacecraft controlled
by overseas parties. Howarth in this instance was expressing his own personal
view and not necessarily that of Australia’s department of defense.
Howarth says there was no push within the department to have a military payload
on an NBN satellite.
Sumber: Aviation Week
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar
KOMEN POSITIF "OK"